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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, May 31, 2019
Responsibility Of ‘Moderate’ Muslims
They may not represent the Islam that moderate Muslims know and follow, but their actions are inspired by their own version or interpretation of it.
The Easter bombings in Sri Lanka once again turned a spotlight on the
challenge of global jihad, terrorism and Islamophobia. Muslim scholars
and community leaders from across the world have condemned the attack,
dissociated themselves from the perpetrators and defended Islam as a
religion of peace.
Many Muslims are constantly feeling like they need to apologise. Still,
they continue to face a backlash and stereotyping of their community.
The fear of reprisals combined with growing Islamophobia compels Muslims
to insist that these acts have nothing to do with their faith. This
urge to separate religion from the violence committed in its name is
well intentioned and understandable, yet counterproductive.
It is true that these terrorists do not represent the overwhelming
majority of Muslims, who oppose terrorist groups like the militant
Islamic State (ISIS), the Taliban, and Al Qaeda. However, it does not
necessarily mean that they have nothing to do with religion. They may
not represent the Islam that moderate Muslims know and follow, but their
actions are inspired by their own version or interpretation of it.
Here, it is worth emphasising that, as a Muslim, I strongly believe that
the Muslim belief is no more “violent” than those of other religions.
Neither is religion the only cause of such violence. Instead, violent
extremism is a complex phenomenon with multiple driving factors
including injustice, identity crisis, extremist ideologies, and
socioeconomic reasons. Their salience varies across time and space.
There is no clear profile or single causal pathway that can define the
process of radicalisation. There is also no denying that colonialism,
Western military interventions in Muslim countries and support to
authoritarian Muslim rulers have played a role in the rise of Islamic
extremists and militants in the Muslim world. To summarise, it is often a
combination of politics and extremist interpretations of Islam that
produces the vitriolic narrative and rampage that most Muslim countries
face today.
The problem is that while Muslims almost always talk about the politics
that creates terrorism, and rightly so, they are reluctant to discuss
the role of radicalised interpretations in inspiring terrorist violence.
In Muslim-majority countries, a small segment of Muslims do recognise
the challenge posed by radical interpretations of religion and disputes a
literalist reading advocated by fundamentalists. Quranic verses, they
argue, are often misinterpreted and quoted out of context. There are,
however, two points which must be considered in the debate.
First, these debates are restricted to the drawing rooms and private
gatherings of a tiny liberal, secular and left-leaning class that is
often insulated from the rest of society which is generally
conservative. Publicly, most Muslims are reluctant to openly engage in a
debate regarding religion. Those who do so often pay a huge price.
Second, the lack of an authoritative hierarchy in doctrinal
interpretation means that any Muslim can interpret religion the way he
or she likes. While making Islam more egalitarian and democratic, this
also makes it easier for extremists to promulgate their literal
interpretations despite opposition by a large majority of Muslim clerics
and scholars.
Moderate Muslims cannot be blamed for not engaging in open public debate
because most Muslim countries lack the environment required for
discussing sensitive issues. The countries where there is space for
critical debates are the relatively advanced democracies of the
developed world. However, in almost all such countries, Muslims are also
a minority and often the victims of hatred and prejudice inspired by
Islamophobia. Consequently, conscious of their minority status, moderate
and liberal Muslims in these countries hold back their views on
religion for fear of being seen as abettors of Islamophobia.
The rise of right-wing nationalism in Europe and America has only
reinforced their concerns. Diaspora Muslims fear that even pointing out
that militancy might have something to do with a certain interpretation
will feed into Islamophobia. The nuance about particular
interpretations, the argument goes on, would gradually disappear in the
public debate and Islam as a religion and Muslims as a group would be
criticised. These are legitimate concerns and it is, therefore, not
surprising that diaspora Muslims scholars and intellectuals are at the
forefront of the “IS-has-nothing-to-do-with-religion” school of thought.
The real challenge for Muslims is to be able to have these difficult
conversations in a way that does not lead to more Islamophobia or
buttress the West’s Orientalist and stereotypical view of Islam and the
Muslim world. Moderate Muslims must understand, deconstruct and
delegitimise the extremists’ version of Islam rather than denying the
existence of their interpretation. By denying any link between faith and
the violence carried out in its name, Muslims foreclose all public
debate on different interpretations and help extremist Muslims get away
with their context-less versions.
This denial has given right-wing nationalists in Europe and America an
opportunity to cash in on the growing public unease about Muslims and
their faith. They need to realise that the extremists’ interpretation
can only be countered and discredited publicly if its existence is first
admitted and then actively contested and challenged. This may sound
like a daunting task, but it is the only way moderate Muslims can ensure
that their vision of a more tolerant and inclusive Islam prevails.